Definition of Cottown

1. a group of cot-houses [n -S]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Cottown

cottonseed meal
cottonseed oil
cottonseeds
cottontail
cottontail rabbit
cottontails
cottontop
cottontop tamarin
cottontops
cottonweed
cottonweeds
cottonwick
cottonwood
cottonwoods
cottony
cottown (current term)
cottowns
cottrel
cottrels
cotts
cottuses
cotunneling
cotunnelling
cotunnite
coturnix
coturnixes
cotutor
cotwal
cotwals
cotylae

Literary usage of Cottown

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. History of Arbroath to the Present Time: With Notices of the Civil and by George Hay (1899)
"John Strachan. cottar- man, cottown of Grange, Kinnel, carried arms at Culloden ... William Taylor, brewer, cottown of Garden, was with the rebels in Eng- 1 ..."

2. General View of the Agriculture of the County of Angus, Or Forfarshire: With by James Headrick (1813)
"George M.TI«Li in Crook, Jean Ramsay, Robert Forbes, Robert Hodge, and Agnes Wro^- ster in the cottown of Lower, James Robert in ..."

3. The Geology of Central and Western Fife and Kinross: Being a Description of by Archibald Geikie, Benjamin Nieve Peach (1900)
"The shales among which it has been injected, on the high road between Stewart's Arms Inn and cottown, form the base of the Carboniferous Limestone series, ..."

4. Publications by Spalding Club, Aberdeen (1857)
"... of the mains of Maryculter, with the tithes as well of the Mains as of the cottown, AD 1545 596 Lease by James, lord of St. John's, knight, preceptor of ..."

5. An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language: To which is Prefixed, a by John Jamieson (1879)
"cottown, COTTON, COTTAR-TOWN, ». A small village, or hamlet, possessed by cottars or cottagers, dependent on the principal farm, S. "Cottagers are collected ..."

6. A Treatise on the Law of Domestic Relations: Embracing Husband and Wife by James Schouler, Arthur Walker Blakemore (1921)
"... conversion of cottown grown on land owned by them jointly.51 Under the New York Married Women's Act a wife may maintain an action of tort for conversion ..."

7. History of Arbroath to the Present Time: With Notices of the Civil and by George Hay (1899)
"John Strachan. cottar- man, cottown of Grange, Kinnel, carried arms at Culloden ... William Taylor, brewer, cottown of Garden, was with the rebels in Eng- 1 ..."

8. General View of the Agriculture of the County of Angus, Or Forfarshire: With by James Headrick (1813)
"George M.TI«Li in Crook, Jean Ramsay, Robert Forbes, Robert Hodge, and Agnes Wro^- ster in the cottown of Lower, James Robert in ..."

9. The Geology of Central and Western Fife and Kinross: Being a Description of by Archibald Geikie, Benjamin Nieve Peach (1900)
"The shales among which it has been injected, on the high road between Stewart's Arms Inn and cottown, form the base of the Carboniferous Limestone series, ..."

10. Publications by Spalding Club, Aberdeen (1857)
"... of the mains of Maryculter, with the tithes as well of the Mains as of the cottown, AD 1545 596 Lease by James, lord of St. John's, knight, preceptor of ..."

11. An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language: To which is Prefixed, a by John Jamieson (1879)
"cottown, COTTON, COTTAR-TOWN, ». A small village, or hamlet, possessed by cottars or cottagers, dependent on the principal farm, S. "Cottagers are collected ..."

12. A Treatise on the Law of Domestic Relations: Embracing Husband and Wife by James Schouler, Arthur Walker Blakemore (1921)
"... conversion of cottown grown on land owned by them jointly.51 Under the New York Married Women's Act a wife may maintain an action of tort for conversion ..."

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